1. MEANING & CHARACTERISTICS
Decision Making: Process of consciously choosing best course of action from alternatives to achieve desired result. Derived from Latin 'deciso' (cutting off – to come to a conclusion).
Characteristics: Process of selecting best alternative, Mental/intellectual activity, Continuous & dynamic process, Based on reliable information, Goal-oriented, Means not the end, Requires effective communication, Performed at all levels, Responsible job (wrong decisions costly), Social process (needs cooperation), Inter-disciplinary (needs economics, statistics, psychology).
2. DECISION MAKING PROCESS (STEPS)
Step 1 – Identifying/Defining the Problem: Gather relevant information, use judgement & experience (Tesla identified range anxiety as key problem).
Step 2 – Analyzing the Problem: Consider futurity, impact on other areas, qualitative factors, uniqueness.
Step 3 – Collecting Relevant Data: Obtain all available information for clarity.
Step 4 – Developing Alternative Solutions: Determine all possible courses of action.
Step 5 – Selecting the Best Solution: Consider risk, economy of effort, timing, resource availability (Maruti Suzuki chose to launch all-new Baleno).
Step 6 – Converting Decision into Action: Clear communication, gaining acceptance, correct timing.
Step 7 – Ensuring Feedback: Check effectiveness against expectations.
3. TYPES OF DECISIONS
Strategic Decisions: Top management, Long-term (3-5+ years), Organization-wide, High risk. Example: Amazon launching AWS, Tata acquiring JLR.
Tactical Decisions: Middle management, Medium-term (1-3 years), Departmental, Moderate risk. Example: Flipkart investing in logistics, quarterly marketing campaigns.
Operational Decisions: Lower management, Short-term (daily/monthly), Unit-specific, Low risk. Example: Myntra homepage features, daily staff schedules.
4. PERSPECTIVES OF DECISION MAKING
Integrative Perspective: Brings together different elements/functions/departments; considers organization as whole system; ensures synergy & coordination (product launch involving R&D, production, marketing, sales).
Interdisciplinary Perspective: Uses knowledge from multiple disciplines – economics, psychology, sociology, statistics; leads to comprehensive decisions (economic analysis for pricing + psychological principles for marketing).
Inter-locking Perspective: Decisions at different levels are interconnected; strategic locks with tactical, which locks with operational; ensures consistency & alignment (international expansion decision locks with market entry choices, which locks with local staffing).
Inter-personal Perspective: Focuses on human relationships, group dynamics, leadership styles, communication patterns in decision-making.
IMPORTANT EXAM QUESTIONS
1. "Decision-making is the primary task of a manager." Explain any five characteristics (5 marks).
2. Explain the steps involved in the decision-making process (5 marks).
3. Explain the three types of decisions based on organizational level with examples (5 marks).
4. Explain the four perspectives of decision making (5 marks).